Chapter Twenty-Seven
It was late when Darcy descended the steps of Ashcombe House, the night settled deep and still about the square, the lamps casting long, wavering shadows across the pavement.
The world had quieted to that peculiar hour when even London seemed to pause, its endless motion transformed to a distant murmur.
His carriage waited. It was not the same conveyance that had borne the crest of Vendicarsi so prominently upon its doors.
That emblem, carefully contrived to lend credence to his assumed identity, had not been added to the small vehicle that waited for him.
Where the crest might have been was blank—only the dark, unadorned surface of the panels, polished to a subdued sheen that reflected little and revealed less.
The horses were black. The carriage itself was black. There was a severity to it, a deliberate absence of distinction that suited the purpose of the night.
Darcy paused only briefly before stepping inside.
Lucien followed. He settled opposite with his usual ease, though there was a perceptiveness in his gaze that did not go unnoticed.
He had, of course, seen and commented on the change in Darcy that day, the shift that had begun not with this night, but in the garden at Matlock House, and had continued, steadily and without retreat, toward something that neither of them could now deny.
The door closed with a finality, shutting out the last familiar sight of the house that had, for a time, served as both refuge and stage for the life he had constructed.
Darcy gave the direction. The carriage moved.
For a time, neither spoke. The regular rhythm of the wheels upon the road, the faint creak of the carriage as it turned through the quieter streets, formed a background against which Darcy’s thoughts rose and fell, each time with increasing clarity.
He sat with his hands clasped lightly before him, his posture composed.
But there was a tension beneath it that spoke not of uncertainty, but instead of anticipation he had spent years attempting to master.
Richard had told him to stay away. The instruction had been given with good reason.
The Home Office had arranged its trap with care, and any interference—any unexpected presence—might complicate matters unnecessarily.
It would have been wiser to remain at Ashcombe House, to await the outcome in safety, to trust in the machinery already set in motion.
Darcy had not done so. He could not. This was the culmination of years of suffering endured in silence, of plans laid in darkness, and of patience forced upon him until patience itself had become a discipline.
To remain apart now, to allow the moment to pass without witnessing it—such a thing was beyond him.
He did not intend to interfere, but he would see.
Lucien regarded him before speaking. “You mean to be present,” he said. “Despite what your cousin instructed?”
Darcy inclined his head. “I do.”
“And you believe that wise?”
Darcy met his gaze. “I believe it necessary.” Necessary for my sanity. I must see the end of this.
Lucien studied him, then leaned back, his expression thoughtful rather than disapproving. “Then it is well that I shall accompany you.”
Darcy’s brow lifted faintly. “Why?”
Lucien’s mouth curved in the slightest of smiles. “Because,” he said, “it is my greatest hope that this night marks both an ending and a beginning. I would not miss either.”
Darcy considered him.
Lucien’s gaze did not waver. “We have come too far,” he insisted. “You have come too far. I would see you through the last of it.”
Darcy inclined his head. “Then I am glad of your company.” Lucien’s presence was comforting. He was a faithful friend and companion and knew better than anyone else what Darcy had experienced on the Isle of Wight.
Lucien’s smile deepened, though he said nothing further. Silence returned, though it was not the same silence as before. It carried now a different power, one shaped not by uncertainty, but by the knowledge of what lay ahead and what might follow it.
Darcy’s thoughts turned, as they so often did, to Elizabeth.
Her presence in his life had altered the course of everything.
What had once been a singular pursuit, defined by loss and sustained by resentment, had shifted into a broader and more complex purpose.
He still desired justice. That had not changed.
The wrongs done to him, to his family, and to the very order of his life demanded redress.
The sharp, consuming edge of his hatred had eased.
He no longer craved their destruction as he once had.
He sought instead the certainty that justice would be done.
It will be done, he thought. And when it is, I shall not be left with nothing.
That, perhaps, was the greatest difference. There had been a time when he believed vengeance would be all that remained to him, and that once it was accomplished, nothing would lie beyond it except the echo of what had been lost. Now, that emptiness no longer loomed before him.
There was a future beyond it. There was Elizabeth.
He thought of her as she had stood in the garden, her eyes filled with tears and certainty, her voice calm even in its emotion. He thought of the way she had spoken his name—not as a question, nor as a doubt, but as a truth long known and finally voiced aloud.
Fitzwilliam.
The memory stirred a deep and vital part of him, one that had nothing to do with vengeance and everything to do with life.
He had not lost himself. For all that had been taken from him, and for all that he had endured, he had not become the man he once feared he might.
He had not surrendered entirely to bitterness, nor allowed his purpose to consume what remained of his better nature.
Elizabeth had seen to that. So had Lucien.
Without them, he might well have crossed that line without knowing it.
Might have pursued his enemies with a ruthlessness that left no room for mercy, no space for reflection.
Now, he stood at the edge of that final act and found himself still capable of restraint, still capable of choice. His hand tightened where it rested.
I have come this far, he thought. And I have not lost my soul.
The realization did not bring triumph. It brought something more enduring. Relief.
The carriage turned, the streets growing narrower, the air carrying with it the faint scent of the river. The distant sound of water lapping against wood reached them, mingled with the low murmur of voices and the occasional sharp call of a man at work.
They were near. Darcy’s attention sharpened. The carriage slowed, then came to a halt. He stepped down without hesitation.
The docks stretched before him, dimly lit by scattered lamps that cast uneven light across the scene.
The outlines of ships rose dark against the sky, their masts cutting sharp lines against the faint glow beyond.
Men moved about with purpose, their figures half lost in shadow as they labored to unload cargo with practiced efficiency.
The ship in question was easily identified.
It lay apart from the others, its gangplank lowered, its deck active with motion.
Crates were being passed down, their contents unknown to all but those who had arranged their arrival.
The work proceeded with careful urgency, as though those involved were aware that time was not entirely their own.
Darcy remained where he was, just beyond the circle of light. Lucien stood beside him, silent. Darcy’s gaze moved across the scene, taking in every detail, every motion, every face he could discern. Then he saw them.
They stood a short distance from the main activity, positioned where they might observe without interfering.
Their posture was composed, their attention fixed upon the work before them.
Hargrave. Langford. Even at a distance, Darcy recognized them without difficulty.
The set of Hargrave’s shoulders, the calculated stillness of Langford’s stance—these were not things easily mistaken.
They waited. As he did. Darcy did not move.
The years seemed to gather in that moment, all that had led to this point converging upon the stretch of dock where men labored under dim light and two figures stood in expectation of success.
It ends here, he thought. Or rather, it began the end.
He stood in the shadows, unseen, his presence unmarked and watched as the final pieces of his past moved inexorably toward their conclusion.
Darcy had not long been standing in the shadows when the stillness of the dock shifted.
At first, it was no more than a subtle tightening of the air, a sense that something lay just beyond sight, waiting.
The men at work continued their labor, passing crates from hand to hand, their movements practiced and efficient.
The low murmur of voices carried on, punctuated by the occasional scrape of wood against wood, the dull thud of cargo set down with care.
Then, all at once, the illusion of order shattered.
From behind stacked barrels, from the shadowed edges of neighboring warehouses, from the darkened hulls of ships moored nearby, figures emerged.
Red coats flashed in the lamplight, their sudden appearance as sharp as the crack of a pistol.
Muskets were raised, commands given in firm, unmistakable tones.
“Stand fast!”
The men at the crates froze.
Darcy moved swiftly, retreating to the carriage.
He opened the door just enough to allow sound to carry, the narrow gap sufficient for his purpose.
The driver remained upon the box, betraying no sign that anything out of the ordinary had occurred, though Darcy could see the slight tension in his posture.
The dock was no longer a place of commerce. It had become a place of reckoning.
Hargrave stepped forward, his composure strained but not broken. “What is the meaning of this?” he demanded, his voice carrying clearly over the sudden stillness.